pellicle;n884798 said:
best laugh I've had all week .. seriously?
Rather than point out the obvious (that said practitioner is a moron) I will be be generous and say that they probably just don't agree with acupuncture and consider it a sham ... which in my view it is. Its a theatre in which a more powerful delivery of essentially the administration of a placebo occurs. Many Doctors don't like it as they feel it takes money away from them (at worst) and (at best) delays the person seeking actual effective treatment.
On an informational note I strained my elbow at work and it was suggested (by my Dr as it happens) that I give acupuncture a go on this issue.
I did, it didn't do anything to help the pain (but did lighten lifting my wallet, so there's that)
He knows full well I'm on warfarin (as indeed do I)
FFS ... bleeding risk? Talk about the bottom of the barrel.
Worth a read:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4578107/
Thank You, Pellicle! Glad you had a good laugh! I almost did too, but did not want to offend my neighbour. I knew that you would come through for me! That was my thinking too, but I am not on ACT and I was very surprised to hear this. By the way, it was a cardiologist who told him to stay away from acupuncture....obviously, not a very informed cardiologist! I will broach the subject with him when I run into him.
Thanks again! Appreciate the input.
I do want to keep this as an ACT question and not delve into the pros and cons of acupuncture, but appreciate your thoughts on it. I had a elbow injury a few years ago and I can tell you with certitude that the acupuncture did help with my recovery. Of course, this is only my experience in this situation.
A little food for thought and for your reading pleasure, only if it interests you....and yes, this evidence based article was commissioned by the Australian and Chinese Medicine Association (full disclosure).
Methods
A search of PubMed and Cochrane Library for systematic reviews and meta-analyses from March 2013 to September 2016 was conducted. Three reviews from October 2016 to January 2017 were also included. Evidence levels were graded using NHMRC levels. Risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane GRADE system where possible. All results were displayed in tables to demonstrate changes in evidence level over time, as well as the current state of evidence by clinical area
Conclusions Systematic reviews published up to January 2017 indicate that acupuncture has a ‘positive effect’ on eight conditions (migraine prophylaxis, headache, chronic low back pain, allergic rhinitis, knee osteoarthritis, chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, post-operative nausea and vomiting and post-operative pain), ‘potential positive effect’ on a further 38 conditions, ‘unclear/insufficient evidence’ for 71 conditions and ‘no evidence of effect’ for five conditions. Evidence of cost-effectiveness was identified for 10 conditions, and evidence for safety was identified for nine conditions.
http://www.asacu.org/wp-content/uplo...roject-The.pdf